Summer means sun. Weeks off school, days off work, Coronas under a palm tree as a sea breeze washes over you. But it also means it’s time for Hollywood’s big shebang: the summer blockbusters. And since we’re in the midst of celebrating all things summer and all things gaming, what better time to honour – and shame – the games of the biggest summer blockbusters of all time. The Star Wars Series (1977, 1980, 1983, 1999, 2002, 2005) The Movies : Star Wars needs no introduction. The most powerful force in popular culture of the past generation, its six movies were released across four decades, the first in 1977, the last in 2005. Some of them are great! Some of them, not so great. The Games : There are just too many Star Wars games to mention here. Though, remarkably, for all the franchise’s success, very few have been directly related to the events of the movies. And the best of those by far were Lucasarts Super Star Wars series, released in the mid-1990’s for the Super Nintendo. Re-telling the events of the original trilogy through a combination of 2D platforming and vehicle sections, they stand as an example of movie licenses done right (even if they were a little late). The Dark Knight (2008) The Movie : The Dark Knight sits at #4 on the all-time box office charts , having taken in a whopping $1,001,921,825. It also holds the all-time record for the biggest opening weekend in cinema history, making $155,340,000. The Game : Despite the immense interest in both the film and the franchise brought about by this movie (and, admittedly, the death of co-star Heath Ledger), in a rare showing there was never a console Dark Knight game. Well, there was never one released . Pandemic’s Australian studio were working on a tie-in game, which was destined to be an open-world title (GTA meets Splinter Cell), but publisher mismanagement and quality concerns led to the game’s (and the studio’s) demise . Jurassic Park (1993) The Movie : Just squeaking into the top 10-grossing movies of all time, Jurassic Park saw Steven Spielberg bring Michael Crichton’s novel about dinosaur cloning gone mad to the big screen. With spectacular results. Sure, it wasn’t as gritty as the source material, and those kids were annoying , but it still ranks as one of the most visually impressive films of all time. The Games : While there have been many games based on the franchise over the years, at the time of the original film’s release, only two tie-in titles were put out, one for the Super Nintendo, one for the Genesis. And in a rare move, both games were completely different. The Mega Drive game was a woeful platformer, while the SNES game was a surprisingly brilliant title, blending top-down exploration with first-person combat sections. The Lion King (1994) The Movie : Many would argue that The Lion King was Disney’s last truly great in-house movie, and it’s box office takings bear that out, as at #24 it’s the highest-ranked Disney cartoon on the list of the top-grossing films of all time. A simple tale of a cub’s difficult journey to adulthood, it’s given surprising depth and maturity from some excellent casting and bleak visuals. The Game : Lion King had a lot to live up to, following Shiny’s amazing Aladdin title, but for the most part it lived up to those lofty expectations. The art and animation was handled by Disney, while the game was worked on by none other than Westwood Studios, of Command & Conquer fame. ET: The Extra Terrestrial (1982) The Movie : Spielberg’s film about an alien that comes to spread love, and not destruction, is still fondly-remembered, even if that fondness is restricted to a silly catchphrase about phones and the fact Drew Barrymore was in it. The Game : Oh boy. When you want to talk about crummy games based on movies, they don’t get much worse than ET. Rushed out in a matter of weeks so it could cash in on the film, the game bore little resemblance to the movie, and was a sales disaster . Things were so bad, in fact, that in 1983 Atari - reeling from the video game market crash it helped create with games like ET - filled a truck full of ET cartridges and buried them in a hole somewhere in the New Mexico desert. The Back To The Future Series (1985, 1989, 1990) The Movies : Marty McFly. Awesome Nike sneakers. Time-travelling locomotives. The Back to the Future series was perhaps the best example of the feel-good 80’s blockbuster, with Michael J Fox and his time-travelling companion, the bonkers Doc Brown (Christopher Lloyd) managing to screw with the space-time continuum not once, not twice, but thrice. The Games : For a movie trilogy that wasn’t exactly big on action, Back to the Future somehow spawned around half a dozen games. Here, we’re paying tribute to the worst , a vertically-scrolling game for the NES where you, as Marty McFly (apparently) have to run up a street collecting clocks, all the while avoiding men carrying panes of glass. And…that’s about it. The Pirates Of The Caribbean Series (2003, 2006, 2007) The Movies : Based on a theme park ride of all things, Pirates of the Caribbean was one of the surprise hits of 2003, so much so that two further movies

View post:
Thanks, Hollywood, For These "Summer Blockbusters" [Video Game Summer]